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IS THERE LIFE AFTER FOOTBALL? INSTRUCTOR’S GUIDE Is There Life After Football? draws upon the experiences of hundreds of former players as they describe their lives after their football days are over. The authors begin with an analysis of the “bubble”-like conditions of privilege that NFL players experience while playing, condi- tions that often leave players unprepared for the real world once they retire and must man- age their own lives. The book also examines the key issues affecting former NFL players in retirement: social isolation, financial concerns, inadequate career planning, psychological challenges, and physical injuries. From players who make reckless and unsustainable financial investments during their very few high-earn- ing years, to players who struggle to form personal and professional relationships out- side of football, the stories in the book put a very human face on the realities of the world of professional football. George Koonce Jr., a former NFL player himself, weaves in his own story throughout, explaining the challenges and setbacks he encountered. Ultimately, Is There Life After Football? con- cludes that, despite the challenges players face, it is possible for players to find success after leaving the NFL if they have the right support, education, and awareness of what might await them. But players themselves must also resist being totally engulfed by the NFL culture in which they live. A fascinating study with unprecedented insider access, this book is essential reading for anyone interest- 336 PAGES ed in the world of professional football. CLOTH • 978-1-4798-6286-3 WWW . NYUPRESS . ORG NYU PRESS “IT’S ALL OVER.” SUMMARY The introduction serves as a foundation for the book, introducing the reader to “Is there life after football?” The answer is, “Of course,” but the quality of life depends on a complex mix of factors. The recent cascade of reports of head in- juries, bankruptcies, and lives gone awry has predisposed the popular media and sports journalists to emphasize the perils of both playing and retiring from foot- ball. Many decry the NFL’s and the players union’s (NFLPA) indifference to the plight of former players. At the same time, players are often portrayed as high- ly-paid, self-centered, spoiled, thuggish, and immature. But the media tends to ignore more mundane success stories, leaving the public with little but visions of life after football as a cataclysmic mess. Why do relatively young, capable men who are apparently on top of the world seem to fall off the cliff after retirement? Why has the lucrative financial situation of NFL players not translated into rich lives after football? What are most lives after football really like? INTRODUCTION Is There Life After Football? offers an “insider’s” look at the challenges facing NFL players when they leave the game, but it also provides an analytic distance from which to approach the many paradoxes of NFL life. The book draws upon the experience and stories of hundreds of former players as they describe their lives after their playing days are over. It also incorporates stories about their playing careers and discusses their lives before entering the NFL, to provide context for understanding their current situations. The research is inspired by the NFL experience of former Super Bowl veteran George Koonce. It draws upon his decades in and around the NFL, as well as his own retirement. The book begins with an analysis of the bubble-like conditions of privilege that NFL players experience even before they enter the league, conditions that often leave players unprepared for the real world once they retire and must manage their own lives. The book also examines the key issues affecting former NFL play- ers in retirement: social isolation, financial concerns, inadequate career planning, psychological challenges, and physical injuries. From players who make reckless and unsustainable financial investments to players who struggle with personal and professional relationships outside of football, the book puts a very human face on the realities of the world of professional football. Is There Life After Football? ultimately concludes that, despite the challenges, it is possible for players to find success after leaving the NFL if they have the right support, education, and awareness of what awaits them. But players themselves must also resist being totally engulfed by the NFL culture in which they live. 2 NYU PRESS INSTRUCTOR’S GUIDE CHAPTER 1 PURSUING THE DREAM SUMMARY Players’ challenges dealing with life after football can be found in players’ deep and longstanding commitment to the game and its associated identities and life- style. For many, football has literally been the heart of their lives since they were kids, and it increasingly engulfs them as they move up the sports and education- al ladders. • NFL careers begin with a childhood dream. Players have devoted their lives to pursuing this dream through a combination of work, talent, and opportunity. • Dreaming of a financially lucrative NFL career is a relatively recent phenome non. Members of earlier generations of NFL retirees dreamed of playing an exciting game at an elite level of competition, but big money wasn’t yet a part of it. • Television marketing changed all that, as the NFL became America’s game by the 1970s. Today, football is not only heroic, it also promises financial fortunes. • Childhood play turns into practice, commitment and conditioning. • Football stardom often brings tremendous ego gratification and public adulation. Onto the “Conveyor Belt” • Most players realize that going to college is the only route to the NFL. The odds of earning a full ride to college are not that much better than the odds of making it in the NFL. • Since the inception of football in the 19th century, special incentives— inducements, promises, and bribes—have been the stock and trade of college recruiting. • Sports journalist William Rhoden suggests that a “conveyor belt” transports young athletes (especially African Americans) from the innocent fun and games to clubs and specialized leagues and, finally, to college—all with the goal of becoming big-time athletes. Sadly, precious few of them succeed in fashioning NFL careers, and even those who make it to the pros pay a steep price in terms of personal autonomy and identity. The Dream Goes to College • Most elite players go to college primarily to play football. Were it not for foot ball, most big-time players would not have attended the universities where they enrolled. IS THERE LIFE AFTER FOOTBALL? 3 PURSUING THE DREAM • College educations and degrees are valuable perks, but they aren’t the main course on a player’s menu. • Football is the centerpiece of the college experience, and being a top tier player requires nearly total investment of time, energy, and attention. • Division 1 football players enter college less qualified and less prepared than their non-athlete counterparts. • Nevertheless, players graduate from college at rates only slightly lower than CHAPTER 1 CHAPTER 1 comparable college students in general. Black players graduate at substantial ly higher rates than their counterparts. • The typical elite athlete dutifully attends class, follows a recommended course of studies, maintains his eligibility, but devalues the educational experience and sets school aside once his eligibility runs out. • Scholarship players receive extensive academic support and many exceptional perks. Special treatment may lead to college degrees, but players are likely to receive empty educations. Dark Side of Special • Players come to see themselves as special, and as a result, they come to expect special treatment. Many players reach adulthood with limited experience in how to actually manage their own lives. • Elite athletes sometimes lose sight of conventions, rules and regulations by which most people abide. • William Rhoden is critical of how special treatment of young elite athletes shapes their lives and identities. He decries the effects of loading young athletes onto the conveyor belt that transports boys and young men into the mills of the sports-industrial complex where their talents are exploited while their selves are diminished. Role Engulfment • Patti and Peter Adler contend that elite athletes submerse themselves so completely in their athletic roles that they lose sight of other interests, activities, and dimensions of their selves. • They live in the company of athletes, work in the company of athletes, and relax in the company of athletes. Their lives are isolated sanctuaries from the rest of the world. • As their social worlds and experiential focuses narrow, players neglect or abandon other aspects of their identities, becoming totally engulfed in their athletic roles with negative implications for self and identity. 4 NYU PRESS INSTRUCTOR’S GUIDE CHAPTER 1 PURSUING THE DREAM The “Gloried Self” • The experience of glory for college players is so gratifying that they may turn away from other aspects of their lives and selves that did not offer such fulfillment. They are constantly told that they are great, and they come to see themselves in that way. The Adlers call this the “Gloried Self.” • The gloried self is greedy; it elbows aside other identities, becoming the primary self. • The gloried self is so closely tied to football (and by extension, the NFL) that it can’t survive without it. • NFL players are especially vulnerable to identity loss when they leave the game. Their careers date back to childhood; they have pursued no other options along the way. When their careers end, the rest can crumble. Their gloried selves dissolve. QUESTIONS FOR DISCUSSION ➥ NFL careers begin with childhood dreams. Describe the path that NFL players take in pursuit of that dream. ➥ Why do athletes lose their sense of identity as they submerse themselves in their athletic roles? Why are African Americans especially vulnerable in this regard? ➥ Getting accepted into and playing for a Division I college is nearly essential to enter the NFL.
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